Serp-1, a Myxoma Virus-Derived Immune-Modulating Protein, Demonstrates Therapeutic Benefit and Reduces Early Inflammation after Spinal Cord Injury in Rats
Spinal cord injury (SCI) is characterized by severe tissue damage and extreme inflammation involving prolonged invasion of inflammatory cells. Following SCI, there is long-term disability and treatment is limited. We previously demonstrated that sustained subdural infusion of the anti-inflammatory protein, Serp-1, significantly improved functional recovery and reduced inflammatory cell invasion following SCI. We hypothesized that sustained delivery of immune-modulating Serp-1 using a chitosan-collagen hydrogel would demonstrate therapeutic benefits and reduce damage following forceps crush-induced SCI. Following the dorsal column crush injury, we observed that for rats treated with high-dose (100 μg/50 μL) Serp-1, functional motor improvement was observed. There was also a more pronounced neuroprotective effect in comparison to the low-dose (10 μg/50 μL) treatment, which was likely attributable to suppression of local inflammation. Conversely, sustained infusion of low-dose Serp-1 CCH did not enhance recovery. Thus, sustained delivery of immune-modulating Serp-1 through a chitosan-collagen hydrogel exhibits neuroprotective potential following acute SCI.
- Author (aut): Schutz, Lauren
- Thesis director: Lucas, Alexandra R.
- Committee member: Yaron, Jordan R.
- Committee member: Karis, John P.
- Contributor (ctb): School of Life Sciences
- Contributor (ctb): Barrett, The Honors College